From: Ian Goddard (Ian@Goddard.net)
Date: Tue Sep 29 1998 - 11:36:20 MDT
John Clark (jonkc@worldnet.att.net) asked:
>I write a computer program that increases the efficiency
>of a company and lowers it's expenses by by 20$. I sell
>it to the company for 10$. Where is the zero sum?
IAN: The zero-sum exists in total, if expenses
were 5 (just as a random example) and then they
became 2, they were 3 more and now are 3 less,
that's 3 + (-3) = 0 difference over all time.
If the expense of running A (something) is 5 more
than the expense of running B (nothing), then the
expense of B is 5 less than running A, which
means we have 5 + (-5) = 0 total experience.
Zero expense exists, since the entire universe
(sum total of all space-time) expends (losses)
nothing. Yes, heat is lost, but ONLY by sub-
sets of All. All is always the same as it-
self, and thus the expense of All = 0.
That is why everything is a zero-sum game.
Is this not logical? If not, then how so?
**************************************************************
VISIT Ian Williams Goddard --------> http://Ian.Goddard.net
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